from politics to faith to pop culture
G. Willow Wilson is an American author and essayist who divides her time between Egypt and the US. Her articles about modern religion and the Middle East have appeared in publications including the Atlantic Monthly, the New York Times Magazine and the Canada National Post.
Of MoCCA, or Nine Timezones Later
June 29
Omar and I have survived our multi-continental move without losing anything--luggage, musical instruments, or sanity, though the jury is still out on the last one. We spent five eventful days in New York, where mostly by coincidence I got to attend the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art festival. It was a wonderful, very diverse show--more laid back and artsy (in the best possible sense) than a standard comics convention, but still well attended by the die-hard fans that make comicdom tick. I got to meet Brian Wood in person for the first time, along with the eloquent Douglas Wolk, who covers comics for Publisher’s Weekly, and Heidi MacDonald, who writes The Beat, and who is also intimidatingly witty. I also got to hang out with Percy Carey, aka emcee MF Grimm, who is my literary ‘roommate’--both of our books are previewed in the same Vertigo ashcan, so we co-promoted each other’s work at the show. (His graphic novel, Sentences, based on his own experiences in the hip hop industry, is the first book of its kind to be published by Vertigo, and worth a read.)
It’s good to be home.